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Publication : Genetic ablation and restoration of the olfactory topographic map.

First Author  Gogos JA Year  2000
Journal  Cell Volume  103
Issue  4 Pages  609-20
PubMed ID  11106731 Mgi Jnum  J:90981
Mgi Id  MGI:3045629 Doi  10.1016/s0092-8674(00)00164-1
Citation  Gogos JA, et al. (2000) Genetic ablation and restoration of the olfactory topographic map. Cell 103(4):609-20
abstractText  In the olfactory sensory system, neurons expressing a given odorant receptor project with precision to two of 1800 spatially invariant glomeruli creating a topographic map within the olfactory bulb. Olfactory sensory neurons have a half-life of about 90 days and are continually renewing. This poses the problem of how this precise spatial map is maintained throughout the life of the organism. We have developed a genetic approach to effect the synchronous ablation of subpopulations of neurons expressing a given receptor. The axons of newly generated neurons can then be followed as they enter the brain and converge on glomerular targets during adult life. The observation that following neuronal cell killing, the spatial map is faithfully restored, demonstrates that the information necessary for the establishment of the sensory map persists throughout the life of the organism.
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